George Klir

George J. Klir

Professor Klir on IEEE Conference "Intelligent Systems" '08, Varna, Bulgaria
Born (1932-04-22)April 22, 1932
Prague, Czechoslovakia
Died May 27, 2016(2016-05-27) (aged 84)
Vestal, New York, U.S.
Fields Computer science, Systems science
Alma mater Czech Technical University
Doctoral students
  • Roger Cavallo (1977)
  • Hugo J. J. Uyttenhove (1978)
  • Robert Gerardy (1981)
  • Lance Polya (1981)
  • Yu-I. Hsieh (1982)
  • Masahiko Higashi (1983)
  • Abdul Hai (1984)
  • Behzad Parviz (1986)
  • Arthur Ramer (1986)
  • Iris Chang (1986)
  • Matthew Mariano (1986)
  • Terry Potter (1987)
  • Michael Pittarelli (1987)
  • Doug Elias (1988)
  • Zhenyuan Wang (1991)
  • Kevin Hufford (1993)
  • William Tastle (1993)
  • Mark J. Wierman (1994)
  • Myoungkwan Yoo (1994)
  • Cliff Joslyn (1994)
  • James C. Rhodes (1995)
  • Harold W. Lewis, III (1995)
  • Bo Yuan (1995)
  • David Harmanec (1996)
  • Luis M. Rocha (1997)
  • Yin Pan (1997)
  • Richard von Sternberg (1998)
  • Richard M. Smith (2000)
  • Jack Ryder (2004)
  • Zoran Cvijanovich (2007)
  • Ronald L. Pryor (2007)
  • Elvis Ljumić (2007)
  • Olga Martin (2008)
  • Kari Sentz (2008)
Known for Fuzzy logic, General systems theory, Generalized Information Theory, Interval computations

George Jiří Klir (April 22, 1932 Prague, Czechoslovakia – May 27, 2016 Binghamton, USA)[1] was a Czech-American computer scientist and professor of systems sciences at the Center for Intelligent Systems at Binghamton University in Binghamton, New York.

Biography

George Klir was born in 1932 in Prague, Czechoslovakia. In 1957 he received a M.S. degree in Electrical engineering at the Czech Technical University in Prague. In the early 1960s he taught at the Institute of Computer Research in Prague. In 1964 he received a doctorate in computer science from the Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences.

In the 1960s Klir went to Iraq to teach at the Baghdad University for two years. At the end he managed to immigrate to the U.S.[2] He started teaching computer science at UCLA and at the Fairleigh Dickinson University. In 1969 he came to Binghamton University, where he later became professor of systems science. One year (1982–1983) he stayed as a fellow in Dutch Netherlands Institute for Advanced Study in the Humanities and Social Sciences (NIAS), where he completed the manuscript of his book Architecture of Systems Problem Solving. In 2007 he retired after 37 years at the University.

From 1974 to 2014 Klir was editor of the International Journal of General Systems, and from 1985 to 2016 of the International Book Series on Systems Science and Systems Engineering. From 1980 to 1984 George Klir was the first president of the International Federation for Systems Research (IFSR). In the years 1981–1982 he was also president of Society for General Systems Research, now International Society for the Systems Sciences. He was further president of the North American Fuzzy Information Processing Society from 1988 to 1991 and the International Fuzzy Systems Association (IFSA) from 1993 to 1995.

Klir received numerous awards and honors, including 5 honorary doctoral degrees, the Gold Medal of Bernard Bolzano, Lotfi A. Zadeh Best Paper Award, the Kaufmann's Gold Medal, SUNY Chancellor's Award for Excellence in Research and IFSA Award for Outstanding Achievement.[3] In 2007 he has been awarded the Fuzzy Systems Pioneer Award of the IEEE Computational Intelligence Society (CIS).

Work

George Klir is known for path-breaking research over almost four decades. His earlier work was in the areas of systems modeling and simulation, logic design, computer architecture, and discrete mathematics. More current research since the 1990s include the areas of intelligent systems, generalized information theory, fuzzy set theory and fuzzy logic, theory of generalized measures, and soft computing.

See also

Publications

Klir is the author of some 17 books, over three hundred articles, and he also edited 10 books:

Books:

Articles (a selection)

References

External links

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